I remember seeing an article a little while back about this guy who had a similar issue. He ended up using a Raspberry Pi to avoid the ads.
Imperfect Linux-powered DIY smart TV is the embodiment of ad fatigue
Curiosity got the better of me a while back. It’s horrifying and incredibly interesting at the same time.
Thank you for the very detailed response! I’ll give that book a read, it sounds interesting.
Something like this?
EndeavourOS É A MAIOR DE TODOS.
Not sure why everything was capitalised and in Portuguese when I’m using English at the moment.
I asked a similar question a little while back: https://lemdro.id/post/10600532
It doesn’t really mean much, it’s more of a loophole from what I gathered.
Just open this link. It will show you a bunch of details about your device/browser.
The other GitHub link will show you the source code, which you could review yourself or maybe help contribute to the project.
“Sponsor Block” is a game changer as well
I’ve got a feeling it’s a static site but I’ll confirm to make sure.
I’m referring to the fact that they don’t use or have major rate limits on the APIs that they use for either Reddit or YouTube, respectively.
Interesting, I didn’t know that. Thanks for the info!
You’ve given me a great jumping off point, thank you!
It’s not very slow to scrape a website. Works quite well.
That’s good to know, I’ll look into that some more. I was thinking that it might be slow if I’m having to scrape each page, every time a user changes categories (or something similar).
The trouble with that is that it breaks easily when they change something on their site.
I completely forgot about that :(
I really wanted to try BlendOS but the installer didn’t work at all for me and a couple others (this was when v4 was released). Haven’t tried again recently though.
I couldn’t even get the installer to work. Tried a couple times but it just wouldn’t install so I gave up on it - still want to try it though
I hate having to manually deselect all of the cookies/consent toggles, just to get to the end and they have the “accept all” look like the “confirm choice”.
Thanks for the explanation!
Legitimate interest makes complete sense with something like an online shop, but trying to read a news article/blog post, do I really need to have 100s of vendors claiming “legitimate interest”?
How does legitimate interest work?
Some vendors are not asking for your consent, but are using your personal data on the basis of their legitimate interest.
I’ve been looking for something for Wayland, I’ll give this a go, thank you.